A Pragmatic Assessment of Google Translate for Emergency Department Instructions

J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Nov;36(11):3361-3365. doi: 10.1007/s11606-021-06666-z. Epub 2021 Mar 5.

Abstract

Background: Because many hospitals have no mechanism for written translation, ED providers resort to the use of automated translation software, such as Google Translate (GT) for patient instructions. A recent study of discharge instructions in Spanish and Chinese suggested that accuracy rates of Google Translate (GT) were high.

Study objective: To perform a pragmatic assessment of GT for the written translation of commonly used ED discharge instructions in seven commonly spoken languages.

Methods: A prospective assessment of the accuracy of GT for 20 commonly used ED discharge instruction phrases, as evaluated by a convenience sample of native speakers of seven commonly spoken languages (Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, Tagalog, Korean, Armenian, and Farsi). Translations were evaluated using a previously validated matrix for scoring machine translation, containing 5-point Likert scales for fluency, adequacy, meaning, and severity, in addition to a dichotomous assessment of retention of the overall meaning.

Results: Twenty volunteers evaluated 400 google translated discharge statements. Volunteers were 50% female and spoke Spanish (5), Armenian (2), Chinese (3), Tagalog (4), Korean (2), and Farsi (2). The overall meaning was retained for 82.5% (330/400) of the translations. Spanish had the highest accuracy rate (94%), followed by Tagalog (90%), Korean (82.5%), Chinese (81.7%), Farsi (67.5%), and Armenian (55%). Mean Likert scores (on a 5-point scale) were high for fluency (4.2), adequacy (4.4), meaning (4.3), and severity (4.3) but also varied.

Conclusion: GT for discharge instructions in the ED is inconsistent between languages and should not be relied on for patient instructions.

Keywords: communication barriers; language services; machine translation; translation.

MeSH terms

  • Emergency Service, Hospital
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Language
  • Male
  • Patient Discharge
  • Prospective Studies
  • Search Engine*
  • Translating*